On Prince Edward Island the ministry of Rev. John McKinnon . Mr. Munro 's labors were now wholly confined to Brown's Creek, Valleyfield and Caledonia . Here he continued to minister to a warmly attached and appreciative peo¬ ple until the autumn of 1884, when, on account of age and infirmity, he was under the necessity of re¬ signing his charge. Mrs. Munro , a woman of rare accomplishments, having been called to her rest some years before, he, soon after his resignation, went to to live with his eldest daugh¬ ter, the wife of Rev. Ernest Bayne , the minister of . Here, in less than one year after his resignation, this aged and faithful servant of the Lord fell asleep in Jesus . "Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord." Two of Mr. Munro 's sons are in the ministry. One, J. R. Munro , B. A ., is the esteemed pastor of the Presbyterian congrega¬ tion in Antigonish, N. S. ; the other, Christopher Munro , B. A ., is pastor of the Presbyterian Congre¬ gation at Oxford , Nova Scotia . This congregation ( Valleyfield ) having remained vacant for a little over one year, Mr. Roderick Mc ¬ Lean, who had been sent out by the colonial com¬ mittee of the Free Church of Scotland, was or¬ dained and inducted as their pastor on 17th Novem¬ ber, 1885. Mr. McLean entered upon the work of the congregation with earnestness and zeal, and by the blessing of God the harvest was great; hundreds were added to the communion roll during the first three years of his ministry. The good seed which had for many years been faithfully sown by the late 115